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What's in your library?

Rather than listing the current book or comic book you're reading, I'd like everyone to list your favorite, most memorable, most worthy reads, no matter what the genre, as suggestions for others on this site to read.

We all have our favorite reads in our personal libraries, so now is your time to recommend books, and other reading material to the rest of us.... and be sure to tell us why your favorite book, comic, or whatever, earned its place in your library.

I was inspired by a thread found elsewhere, and being a voracious reader, am always looking for good reading suggestions.

Remember folks... any genre.

Mine:

1) The Lost Horizon, by James Hilton. If you've ever heard the term Shangri-La, where inhabitants enjoy unheard-of longevity, then now you know where it came from. The book is a page turner and a quick one day read, but the magic found within will stay with you for the rest of your days.
Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_Horizon

2) The Razors Edge, by W. Somerset Maugham. Another wonderful book that will last you the rest of your days. It is about a WWI pilot, Larry Darrell, traumatized by his experience, commences on a journey to find the meaning of his life.
Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Razor's_Edge

3) The BlackheartsOmnibus, by Nathan Long. A great series of stories that left me longing for more. I do sincerely hope the author continues with the series. Here's the product description from Amazon: Under threat of death for their crimes, Reiner and his companions are forced to carry out the most desperate and suicidal secret missions, all for the good of the Empire. Chaos cultists, ratmen, dark elves, rogue army commanders and more - time and again the Blackhearts are pitted against impossible odds and survive - yet what they most what is their freedom.
Link: http://www.amazon.com/Blackhearts-Om...0159617&sr=8-1

Thoth-Amon, Lord of the Underworldand the Undead
Once you know what the magician knows, it's not magick. It's a 'tool of Creation'. -Archmagus H.H.
The first step to expanding your reality is to discard the tendency to exclude things from possibility. - Meridjet

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: This is what I read at the age most geeks I knew were reading Tolkien. There's the obvious comedy veneer to the narrative, but underneath is fairly meaty philosophy. Story in short: Arthur Dent gets his house demolished to make way for a highway bypass, only to find himself lost in the Galaxy when, in a cruel twist of some form of irony, his planet is destroyed to make way for an interstellar bypass. Hilarity ensues.

Jurassic Park: Dinosaurs, eating people, in a zoo setting? Wuwu~! Sure, I picked it up mere months before the film release; I was twelve, so sue me. Still a fun, fun read.

Calvin and Hobbes and The Far Side collections: I blame my father (for the former) and grandmother (for the latter). Who gives an eight-year-old such subversive materials, really? Accounts for my philosophic bent today, I suppose.

Cruel Shoes: Come for the titular story, stay for "The Day the Dopes Came Over" and "How to Fold Soup." (Hmm, again with the satire; methinks there's a trend ...)

Stuart Little: Okay, it's a kids' book. It's also a rather endearing tale, about growing up different and still finding one's place in the world.

Any genre! okay. Here is a small sampling of books I would recommend. They might not all be to your taste though.

Backyard Ballistics - William Gurstelle. Do I really need to describe the appeal of this book?

You Can Trust the Communists (to be Communists) - Dr. Fred Schwarz. Some funny stuff. Cold War Hysteria at its best.
Word Play: What Happens When People Speak - Peter Farb. A non technical book on language, a very good read.

The Postman - David Brin. I like this book, the end is a bit hokey though.

Band of Brothers - Stephen Ambrose. 82nd Airborne during WWII.

After the Fact - Clifford Geertz. An anthropological memoir of an early anthropologist in which the author ridicules all other anthropologists for not agreeing with his point of view. Very, very funny stuff.

The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingslover. About a family of missonaries in Africa during the 1960's.

Empire of the Sun - J.G. Ballard (who passed away yesterday)

In the Country of the Blind - Michael Flynn. A strange and humorous little book about Cliology, the mathematics of history. A good read.

Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert Heinlein. A classic.

The Human Enterprise: A Critical Introduction to Anthropological Theory - James Lett. A good book, plus I was reading this when I met my wife.

The Dragon Riders of Pern Anne McCaffery. Not just a book, but the entire series. It got me good with the first couple of books Dragonflight and Dragonquest. and I followed ir right down to All thr Weyrs or Pern. Anne has great characterizations and wonderful world building. Pern while having many of the elements of a fantasy is SF on the sly.

Robert Heinlein. Specifically Stranger in a Strange Land, Time Enough for Love and The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. Those three books bent my worldview.

Roger Delany Babel 17. A difficult to describe slice of life book, that pictured a place I wouldn't mind visiting.

Lord of the Rings Tolkien of course. But it is the little stuff that affected me as well Farmer Giles of Ham for example.
Beyond the Sky, and other Stories. Authur C. Clarke. Some of the Seminal SF authors early works. The future that never was. However written in such a compelling way as to feel truthful, even if they were not.

Omnilingual H. Beam Piper A tale of discovery. Archeologists explore the long dead civilization of Mars and discover there is a universal language.

The Foundation Trilogy Issac Asimov. One of my introductions to serious SF. Not the best book ever written but compelling and I remember it well even today.

Shottle Bop Theodore Sturgeon I met the man before I read his work, and damn, he twisted my head around. A gentle man the fount of the milk of Human kindness who wrote some of the most twisted stories you could read. However the Humanity shows through.

Unaccompanied Sonata Orson Scott Card I may never get Kingsmeat out of my head. I believe the heir of Sturgeon myself. This time I read the stories before I met the man, and he is the same kind of man writing the same kind of stories. You don't read them and remain the same.

Enough for this round.

Garry AKA --Phoenix-- Rising above the Flames. My favorite game console is a table and chairs. The Olde Phoenix Inn

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?: The base for Blade Runner, this is a book dealing with what it means to be human. The contrast between protagonist Deckard and antagonist Roy Batty brings about rather intriguing questions as to Deckard's motives and behaviors. (Though, dangit, I can't help but think of Rutger Hauer's final speech in the film; Best. Death. Evar.)

A Scanner Darkly: This book is trippy. Literally. It's largely a product of the author's realizations that he had indulged in drugs a weeeeee bit much, and was unable to separate hallucination from reality. (After reading the book, I highly recommend the Richard Linklater film adaptation of the same name; the performances are very enjoyable, 'specially Robert Downey, Jr. and Woody Harrelson.)

The Prince and The Discourses, by Niccolo Macchiavelli. I read this while on a backpacking trip one summer. It was a very readable translation and provided much food for thought. The Discourses in particular is a very interesting work of political philosophy.

All Quiet on the Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque. I read this one a couple of years ago, having missed out on it during the traditional school years. This book is wasted on the young. It is much more meaningful as an adult, especially given the current world situation.

Anything by George Bernard Shaw. His plays are witty with a more serious underpinning.

Some of Saki's short stories are a lot of fun. His real name was HH Munro. He was killed in WWI. Some of his stories share some of the light-hearted qualities of a good PG Wodehouse romp. Others are quite a bit darker.

Fantasy gaming geeks ought to read the Fafhrd and Gray Mouser series by Fritz Leiber. It's not the best-written stuff in creation and it's rather dated, but I like the energy and verve. Most modern stuff pays homage to this series.

The Picture of Dorian Gray (by Oscar Wilde) and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (by RL Stevenson) are both fun reads as well as being classics with enduring archetypes.

More later if I feel inspired. There are so many to choose from -- Beowulf and other Nordic tales, almost anything by Jane Austen, a lot of other great classic fiction from earlier centuries, the political and historical works that the US founding fathers were influenced by (or wrote), all the great early SF&F whether it's obscure or still well-known, and so on.

I kept most of the assigned reading books from highschool. I guess I felt like I was made to read them and when I was reading them I concentrated more on what I thought might be used as a question on a test than the story itself. I've kept them so I can go back through them and read for understanding ... I just haven't done it yet

American Gods by Neil Gaiman The old gods and ways are being assaulted by the power of our "new" gods.

Fragile Things by Neil GAiman , A book of short stories of him. Nice work.

Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, A man falls between the cracks of the real world and a shadow world.

Sandman by Neil GAiman, Follows the stories of the force of Dream personified. Its a very good read.

As you can see I really like Neil Gaiman. I started reading his stuff in 89 when I picked up a couple of issues of Sandman and can't put them down. He wrote the screen play for the last Beowolf Movie, has two films, writes mulitple short stories (3 collections) a half of dozen Novels. Reinvented the Marvel universe is 1602. Wrote hundreds of comics three childrens novels and one TV series as of right now. I undrestand there are talks of two more of his creations going to the big screen.

Forgiot one thing, he is going to write 3 or four episodes of Doctor Who this season witht the new Doc

American Gods by Neil Gaiman The old gods and ways are being assaulted by the power of our "new" gods.

Fragile Things by Neil GAiman , A book of short stories of him. Nice work.

Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, A man falls between the cracks of the real world and a shadow world.

Sandman by Neil GAiman, Follows the stories of the force of Dream personified. Its a very good read.

As you can see I really like Neil Gaiman. I started reading his stuff in 89 when I picked up a couple of issues of Sandman and can't put them down. He wrote the screen play for the last Beowolf Movie, has two films, writes mulitple short stories (3 collections) a half of dozen Novels. Reinvented the Marvel universe is 1602. Wrote hundreds of comics three childrens novels and one TV series as of right now. I undrestand there are talks of two more of his creations going to the big screen.

Forgiot one thing, he is going to write 3 or four episodes of Doctor Who this season witht the new Doc

my buddy loves gaiman. Have you read good omens? He co-wrote that with terry pratchett, but it is awesome.

I kept most of the assigned reading books from highschool. I guess I felt like I was made to read them and when I was reading them I concentrated more on what I thought might be used as a question on a test than the story itself. I've kept them so I can go back through them and read for understanding ... I just haven't done it yet

I could usually either find something I had read or wanted to read on any reading list. I didn't so much read in school as I grazed on print. It was a bit embarrassing to find I read as many books a month as some of the class read a year. 2 to 5 a week on average.

I read fast, I still read fast. I can polish off the average novel in 2 to 3 hours. I cannot pack "a" book for the trip, I need a small library.

Garry AKA --Phoenix-- Rising above the Flames. My favorite game console is a table and chairs. The Olde Phoenix Inn

Pretty good. It takes me all day to polish off a novel. If i could cut it down to 2-3 hours, that would be great for it would give me more time to read my huge to-read pile next to my desk.

Thoth-Amon, Lord of the Underworldand the Undead
Once you know what the magician knows, it's not magick. It's a 'tool of Creation'. -Archmagus H.H.
The first step to expanding your reality is to discard the tendency to exclude things from possibility. - Meridjet